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Eviction filings are up sharply as pandemic rental aid starts to run out
The federal rental aid program expects to distribute the rest of its money by mid-summer. Some cities have already run out of funding, pushing eviction filings higher than before the pandemic.
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•
4:13
The Education Secretary Plays Hardball (And A Cowbell) To Push For Safe Schools
U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona has tried to balance optimism around safe, in-person learning with political pugilism aimed at officials who are making it hard for schools to require masks.
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•
3:51
As Biden Reopens ACA Enrollment, Are You Eligible To Sign Up Or Switch Health Plans?
The federal insurance exchange, HealthCare.gov, has reopened for changes and new sign-ups until May 15. But states with their own exchanges have different rules. Here's what you need to know.
9 States Reopen ACA Insurance Enrollment To Broaden Health Coverage
Some state exchanges have begun allowing new enrollment to help ease consumers' worry about health care costs. It's also so the uninsured won't inadvertently spread the coronavirus by avoiding care.
Biden cuts a planned trip short as debt default threat looms
After a White House meeting Tuesday with top congressional leaders on raising the nation's debt limit, President Biden canceled part of an upcoming trip to focus on the debt ceiling talks.
When a prison sentence becomes a death sentence
As U.S. life expectancy falls, experts say incarceration has serious health impacts. The U.S. has one of the highest rates of people in prison or jail in the developed world.
Are We Really ‘Back To Normal?’ How the Pandemic Changed Grief
It’s apparent society is more than excited to be going back to the times before the pandemic– drinks and laughs are now being shared at bars, music is…
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•
6:51
Readers' global wishes for 2022: More kindness, more nature ... and kitties!
What could the world achieve this year if we had a limitless budget and full support from global leaders? Our audience shares their heartfelt ideas.
Beijing and Moscow unite in efforts to redefine democracy itself
In a pointed message to their international critics, the two autocrats declared it was only up to their own people "to decide whether their State is a democratic one."
Lawmakers are rewriting rules as schools grapple with teacher shortages
Burnout and thinning substitute teacher rolls plus the fallout of the omicron surge is pushing school leaders to the brink of desperation. Lawmakers are responding by rewriting hiring rules.
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